IRISH REPUBLICAN NEWS: Soldier’s death linked to war crime 40 years earlier

Soldier’s death linked to war crime 40 years earlier

A coroner has been given a letter revealing new evidence about a
‘psychopathic’ British soldier who was linked to the murder of a west
Belfast teenager and also plotting to assassinate Gerry Adams.

Corporal John Ross MacKay, who was a member of the Black Watch regiment,
has been accused of killing 17-year-old Leo Norney (pictured) in September 1975.
The former soldier died suddenly in Scotland on the 40th anniversary of
the teenager’s death last September.

Fresh allegations about the Norney case are contained in a letter sent
recently to Belfast-based lawyer Fearghal Shiels. It has since been
passed on to a coroner overseeing a new inquest into the teenager’s
death which was ordered in 2014. The original inquest held in 1976
returned an open verdict.

Written by a man who claims he is a former member of MacKay’s regiment,
the letter alleges that his “psychopathic behaviour was well known in
the Black Watch”. The writer adds that a “drunken psychopath with a
loaded weapon is not a good mix on the streets of Belfast”. He also
claims that MacKay was a “keen Orangeman” and sported a ‘King Billy
tattoo” and was “befriended” by members of the RUC.

Although it is not known how he died, the letter claims he was a “broken
man... haunted by the memory of what he did taking comfort in drink and
drugs, he lost everything”.

Mr Norney was shot dead at Ardmonagh Gardens in Turf Lodge minutes after
getting out of a taxi and being stopped and questioned by members of the
Black Watch. The British army falsely claimed he was one of two gunmen
who opened fire on them, but an RUC member admitted at the inquest there
was no evidence he was a member of an armed group, and a court later
heard he was an innocent victim.

After the shooting the teenager’s body was taken to Springfield Road
barracks instead of the morgue where the bones in his hands are believed
to have been shattered. It was thought the injuries may have been caused
by soldiers attempting to transfer gun residue onto his hands.

The victim’s home was also raided the day after the shooting by British
soldiers who failed to tell his mother her son had been killed.

After the Norney shooting, MacKay was is believed to have been involved
in a plot to kill Gerry Adams. The letter-writer claims that McKay was
given a sawn-off shotgun by RUC members and told to plant it on the
senior republican after he shot him. Subsequently, MacKay was one of
five British soldiers convicted in 1977 of planting ammunition in cars
owned by innocent civilians.

Mr Shiels said MacKay refused to engage with a police Historical
Enquiries Team investigation, describing him as a “most reluctant
witness”.

He added: “We have asked that the coroner makes appropriate enquiries
with the Procurator Fiscal’s office in Scotland to establish if there is
any evidence that his involvement in Leo’s murder and the decision to
order a new inquest in any way contributed to him perhaps taking his own
life, or whether his death merely occurred naturally, 40 years to the
day since he shot Leo.”